News

John Travolta made a surprise appearance at a “Grease” sing-along at the Hollywood Bowl dressed up as his beloved character, ...
Mexican scientists say debris from exploding SpaceX rockets is killing wildlife, including dolphins, sea turtles and fish.
Concerned about the growing amount of space debris, two Virginia students are launching a new way to try and monitor it.
"Being off even a little bit represents hundreds or thousands of kilometers in distance on the surface of the Earth." ...
Motion control engineers tend to focus on torque and speed specifications during the design process, but often fail to notice the unique features that differentiate a ...
A reporter from Grupo Milenio noted that the Milenio newspaper published a report on Thursday about space debris that was ...
Astroscale, the space junk removal venture, announced a British government contract June 16 worth about $7 million to deploy a pair of cubesats in 2027 to monitor space weather while tracking ...
Rapid satellite proliferation, tighter debris regulations, AI analytics, and rising insurance scrutiny converge to transform the space traffic management market, positioning integrated, low-latency ...
Environmental groups say debris from SpaceX’s May 27 Starship launch is washing ashore beaches in northeastern Mexico and southern Texas, raising environmental concerns. The scattered fragments ...
Meanwhile, the debris is being collected as evidence for a potential lawsuit by Mexico against the United States and SpaceX for environmental damages. SpaceX launched the Starship mega-rocket on ...
Space-debris firm that saw shares surge 62% on IPO loses half its value. Astroscale Holdings executives attend the company’s listing ceremony at the Tokyo Stock Exchange in June 2024.
When Astroscale Holdings Inc. began trading in Tokyo a year ago, excitement over the Japanese space-debris pioneer was riding so high that the stock surged 62%, making it a billion-dollar company.